All good writers know that reading is at least as much about reading as it is about writing. It is also, as I discovered on April 7 listening to Barry Lopez speak, about learning from great writers.
“When I go to a place, I attempt to be silent,” he said. “To listen to what the land is trying to say.” This comes as no surprise for anyone who has happened to soak in the language of Barry Lopez, speaking at the Benaroya recital hall as part of the Seattle Arts and Lectures series.
My husband Peter and I swapped Barry Lopez’s masterpiece Arctic Dreams
"What I tell writers,” he said, “is that if you are going to write you must do two bows of respect- the first toward the material, and the second toward the reader…the reader relies on you to get it right, and to make it memorable.” At the reception following his talk, he continued: “I think of myself as a writer not as leading the reader, but rather walking behind her, showing her things to see. By the end of a good book, she will have completely forgotten me. I haven’t told her what to think, but have convinced her to ask questions, to draw her own conclusions.” In all of our efforts as writers, he exhorted us in the audience not to look for people to blame in the problems we see in the world, but to find a way to tell the stories, to help people see.
Lopez read from other people’s writing, including Alaskan writer Eva Saulitus, with a grace and humility that saturated his every word and suggestion. Lopez’s only reference to his own work was his recently published Home Ground, Language for an American Landscape
Fitting sentiments for Alaskan writers and all those who write about the land.


1 comments:
Thanks for this, very useful advice and well-written. I love that Lopez reads from others' work as well as his own, and from Eva Saulitas, no less, who I think is one of Alaska's very best.
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